Yes, most octopuses and their relatives in the cephalopod family squirt some manner of ink, although deep-sea cephalopds usually squirt a bioluminescent equivalent that leaves their would-be predator at risk of attack in the darkest parts of the ocean.
Yes, they do. They do this to defend themselves from their enemies.
They shoot ink to get away from enemies.
shooting ink and camoflauge
Well when in danger, the octopus shoots ink so its predator cant see anything so it has a chance to flee.
as it protects itself from predators and escapes from them.
octopus have an ink gland that holds the ink until the octopus decides he is in danger and sprays its enemy with it. The ink of the octopus is toxic and if the predator stays withing reach of the ink for prolongued periods of time it can die.
ink
octopus
Only some species of octopus can shoot ink.
im not sure but i know its from an ink sak in the octopus
They actually sray ink to tell the predator they are going to fight. an octopus is extremely strong and has poison just in case
No.
Ink.
Make the octopus scared it is the only way to do it!